Google Go-Playing A.I. Retires To Focus On Energy Conservation And Medicine (engadget.com)
After "narrowly" beating the world's top Go player, what's left for Google's AlphaGo AI? Engadget reports:
Now that it has nothing left to prove, the AI is hanging up its boots and leaving the world of competitive Go behind. AlphaGo's developers from Google-owned DeepMind will now focus on creating advanced general algorithms to help scientists find elusive cures for diseases, conjure up a way to dramatically reduce energy consumption and invent new revolutionary materials. Before they leave Go behind completely, though, they plan to publish one more paper later this year to reveal how they tweaked the AI to prepare it for the matches against Ke Jie. They're also developing a tool that would show how AlphaGo would respond to a particular situation on the Go board with help from the world's number one player. While you'll have to wait a while for those two, you'll soon be able to watch 50 games AlphaGo played against itself when it was training
The first ten games that AlphaGo played against itself are already online. Shi Yue, 9 Dan Professional and World Champion, described them as "Like nothing I've ever seen before -- they're how I imagine games from far in the future." Google announced that this week's competition "has been the highest possible pinnacle for AlphaGo as a competitive program. For that reason, the Future of Go Summit is our final match event with AlphaGo... We hope that the story of AlphaGo is just the beginning."
The first ten games that AlphaGo played against itself are already online. Shi Yue, 9 Dan Professional and World Champion, described them as "Like nothing I've ever seen before -- they're how I imagine games from far in the future." Google announced that this week's competition "has been the highest possible pinnacle for AlphaGo as a competitive program. For that reason, the Future of Go Summit is our final match event with AlphaGo... We hope that the story of AlphaGo is just the beginning."
At least IBM had the balls to go again.
You think it's called AlphaGo because it plays Go?
Alphabet + Google = AlphaGo
#DeleteFacebook
He's going to stream League of Legends in the future.
I was thinking that it's a sad time when we need a -1 Racist option, but then I recalled the GNAA days.
Mikhail Botvinnik's PIONEER chess engine was used for nation-wide energy network planning something like 50 years ago already.
Try to get it to act as a lawyer. Try to get it to detect cancer in xray pictures. Try to get it to predict terrorist threats.
AI will most likely beat any current and future human at a game that was considered "safe" versus AI opponents.
Are you stupid? They used their AI to cut the energy consumption in their data centers by 40% (!!!). And that was almost a year ago. If it did something similar to the grid, it would save $124 BILLION in electricity each year in the US alone.
I don't know man. The problem there is also with you. I didn't read that as racist until your comment. Because in most real places everyone eats rice bowls. You have to come from a place of racism to think that's racism.
stop anthropomorphizing this machine
Retire while you're the champ.
Energy Conservation and Training for Machine Learning are an oxymoron.
They waste many megawatts per second for training classifiers (neural or not).
For best efforts, they should try to look for good algorithms approximating to P = NP.
https://twitter.com/DeepMindAI...
We decided to publish the remaining #AlphaGo self-play games in one go. We hope players around the world enjoy them!
https://deepmind.com/research/...
I'd like to point out I predicted this in one of the previous threads.
And nobody read it since you start at -1.
You think they will let that happen? Not a chance.
We live in America where weed got banned because it interfered with the paper industries pockets. A world where industries have hijacked our thoughts on pollution that they procuced, and switched it to global warming to hide their misdeeds.
Not a chance.
Link the games in a video or gif as a fallback. The game website currently has an interactive format in the form of a shitty pile of javascript that apparently requires 40% of my cpu capacity to render a single still frame of a go board.
Agree. It's nowhere near the level of GNAA. Precious snowflakes.
In all honesty tho, I think the trolls ruined it for everyone. They spew the most racist sick shit and just ruin it for everyone. Now anything you say about somebody else is racist. Stereotypes aren't racist.
Laugh at yourself, and laugh at others. It's good for the soul. But don't be a dick.
So they going to stop playing around with the AI and have it do something useful? Though playing a game is much easier to program then curing unknown diseases.
Wow, way to talk without knowing a thing about it.
AlphaGo managed to beat one of the best player in recent history (Lee Sedol) last year, then went on a 60-0 strike against the highest ranked professionals. Now he won a tournament with the world champion without ever showing a weakness. The experts were pretty much anonymous that he never had a chance at this point.
DeepMind have already published the details of the algorithm in a Nature paper and will do the same with the recent improvements later this year. I guess if you're right nobody will be able to reproduce the results...
>One of the world's largest corporations will not be allowed to bring a product to market because it might hurt smaller corporations
Wowee.
We live in America where weed got banned because it interfered with the paper industries pockets.
What?
The machine learns faster than humans because it plays millions of times as many games as the humans. It already revolutionized the strategy of the game. If humans start to find ways to defeat those strategies, it will learn that as well and quickly develop new strategies.
That steam hammer shall beat you down.
Got any proof of that? From say chess? I didn't think so. You can now get chess programs for your phone that no grandmaster can beat. If you still think a computer can't get that good in Go, you can easily prove it since they already published information n how the previous version of AlphaGo worked and will be publishing how they updated it. So you should be able to duplicate AlphaGo and prove that it loses when you "switch playing styles" on it.
You think they will let that happen?
Who is "they"? If you mean the corps that profit from selling electricity, it is likely that they would be more profitable with greater efficiency. Most electricity is sold at fixed prices, and power companies run "peakers" at a loss. So if more intelligent energy use smooths out the peaks and troughs, the peaker plants can be idled, cheap base power will cover more of the load, and their profits will go up.
How about donating the current snapshot to a computer museum or a go association? If the hardware costs too much, perhaps do a crowdfunding campaign.
I'd say "the A.I. that beat the best human player" has some cultural value. Granted, the possibility of Google going under any time soon is very low, but this piece of great engineering achievement deserves a backup place of safekeeping to ensure it is not lost to the times.
Your reaction is exactly why Google went for that stunt: Even somewhat smart people fall for it.
Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
Got any proof of that? From say chess?
Here's one example. There are plenty of others.
"First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
gweihir is Zap Brannigan
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
Why would anyone ever read the comments here? It's the same guys posting their knee-jerk reactiona to every story. They don't red or think things through. If a headline makes something seem bad, they're outraged. Whenever a new technology is proposed they're pessimistic.
Instead of such frivolous things like "science" it should be handling real problems like spanking people in games of Candyland, The Game of Life and maybe even Monopoly! ;)
Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
"anonymous"? The word you're looking for is "ambiguous". Or did you mean "ambidextrous"?
These kind of examples are for chess engines before the "deep learning" neural net era which AlphaGo opened our eyes. They are also just "bugs" like human players sometimes also have blindspots and make low level mistakes obvious to bystanders. Totally fixable.
Also sounds like the grandparent post don't know it is AlphaGo itself that is introducing a lot of unconventional style and stir the Go-water. Ke Jie studied those games, learnt from them, and fail to beat it one year after Lee Sedol's matches, as the engine developers also learn from the one single game Lee Sedol beat AlphaGo. Bug has been fixed.
"Google Go-Playing A.I. Retires To Focus On Energy Conservation And Medicine "
Non-artificial intelligences usually do it the other way 'round.
Being the world champion Go! player is much more important than finding cures for diseases.
Nah, you're guessing, and poorly. You think AlphaGo doesn't have any bugs? Really?
Once people have a chance to play against these kinds of computers, they'll find the bugs.
"First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
Efficiency gains result in a linear extension of time remaining. New sources of Energy are one option. Curtailing population growth is another. Rather than being responsible about human population growth and executing illegal refugees at the border (eg. antipersonnel mines), Europe has decided to take the easy way out and welcome them with open arms.
Now the first world can enjoy the same poverty as the third world! Brilliant!
"Now that it has nothing left to prove," "what's left for Google's AlphaGo AI?"
How about every other fucking thing?
How about delivering on the threat, that according to Elon Musk and Stephen Hawking, AI apparently poses to all of us? Don't count your laurels too soon Google, it's one thing coming up with an alogorithm when the problem has nicely defined rules and boundaries, and quiet another when it's a real life problem with all of it's uncertainties and vague scope. Keep going, you've barely scratched the surface.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hemp
No, he clearly meant unanimous. How on earth could you perceive that either of your suggestions make any sense?
I assumed by "retiring to focus on energy conservation" they meant that they'll turn the AI off.
That way they'll save 40 % of a data centre's energy, I'm sure.
Yea! And it's not really A.I. any more either now that a computer has done it.
And the sun got in his eyes.
Let me join your "humans bitter against computers" club too!
She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
A game is literally just a set of rules. My only surprise is that it took computers so long to get good at them.
Of course AlphaGo has bugs and imperfect evaluation. It loses against itself. And once in awhile, a human player may create a board position that will reveal one of the bugs. Of course, to reach that position without making any mistakes yourself is incredibly hard. If you let GM Nakamura play 20 games against Stockfish, he may exploit a bug/weakness once, and get crushed the other 19 times simply because he never gets a setup that leads to one of the weaknesses before he makes a mistake himself.
Yep, it was "unanimous" and I can't spell. :p
And my comment was supposed to be a joke :)
I've been following computer go since MCTS was invented, and sorry. This is a funny delusion. The real reason Google is quitting now, is the same that IBM quit Deep Blue. Quit while you're ahead against other developers. Leela and Zen are already incorporating ideas from AlphaGo, and will be improving on them, like they improved on MCTS for close to ten years. Google can't afford to keep up, if they want AlphaGo to stay strongest. It's not a question of money, it's because they would have to keep top-notch machine learning experts working on it full time. But humans? Humans will start losing to all strong programs, not just AlphaGo. These programs don't have any obvious exploitable weaknesses, you know. Even pre-neural net Zen and CrazyStone were 6-7 dan on KGS - for perspective, many very smart people who play Go competitively will never reach that level. It's top club player level. Most European countries don't have a single player on that level. And the current neural net bots besides AlphaGo are even better - pro level. 9d on KGS (the max).
Apparently the US already uses "drone technology" called the Tomahawk missile in situations where they can't or won't send a fighter jet or a bomber.
But I'm not sure they can accomplish that much on their own. E.g. in Syria they were used for propaganda only (or providing training, getting rid of old missiles, moving a few hundred millions into private coffers)
This was useful to re-launch or keep alive the war propaganda (lies) in France and Britain etc., meanwhile Russia and Syria had to do what they do when Turkey or the US throw a tantrum and directly kill Syrian or Russian troops on the battlefield : sit around, do nothing, wait it out.
But with North Korea I don't think that will work the same, although this would be the best case.. US does such a minor attack, North Korea does some minor retaliation, North Korea gets a bit poorer since some shit was ruined/destroyed but the regime gets an internal propaganda victory.
Or, North Korea immediately escalates to nuclear war. This will be the end of the North's regime, but will be bad.
So once DeepMind's advantage is closed in on, they pull the plug so as to not mar the effectiveness of their propaganda campaign.
This whole situation is really a mess. Google did their job well.
People are being severely misled about the nature of artificial intelligence and Go.
AI as we know it is just a brute force program running on a virtual computer. It's not intelligent. I digress on this point.
Go is more like a language by which you communicate abstract ideas:
The idea of "points" and "winning" is really a tacked-on thing. You can increase your abstract literacy by increasing your 'strength' in Go and finding more experienced players to converse with.
But the point is not to win, it's to find more experienced people to talk with.
A machine has absolutely no use for this, and anyone controlling the machine has no use for this either. This whole show is simply about propaganda and the triumph of might over right by brainless brute-force data processing. It's purely about demoralizing people, not about showcasing meaningful technological advances.
Google is basically bringing a flamethrower to a carpentry contest and saying they won because they were 'done' with their wood first.
How Go is supposed to be played is this: people build their strength to gain literacy, then they play games to construct simulated situations that are abstractly parallel to their real-life problems and search for insights in the matter.
Tokugawa and Toyotomi for example used to play Go. Neither was a master of the game, yet both were masters of their domains in reality. Their strength in the game didn't matter, they were literate enough, and they were able to communicate through the game to their immense profit and the strength of Japan, and so took the time to play.
It's too bad most people really have no idea what the point of games in general is. Too much low self esteem, too much blind ambition.
well played
Unlikely.
If "they" see a drop in electricity consumption, other electricity charges will magically go up. Like the "lease fee", or the "electricity transport fee". That's exactly what they did in Belgium. Profits went down because the energy market got cheaper, so they upped other charges.
And mine was an apology and admission that I need some sleep :)
You should have posted unanimously.
maybe he did?
You must be trolling super hard here, or are super stupid. looks at your name. Wow it can be both...
Exactly my point. Thank you.